At 9 p.m. BST, an aerial view from the Telegraph's live coverage shows a small crowd gathered in front of Buckingham Palace to cheer the news. |
The Telegraph reports:
The baby was born at 4.24pm, weighing 8lbs and 6ozs. The Duke of Cambridge was present at the birth, and both mother and baby are said to be doing well.Well done, Kate.
Clarence House, home of the Prince of Wales and the Duchess of Cornwall, announces:
The Queen, The Duke of Edinburgh, The Prince of Wales, The Duchess of Cornwall, Prince Harry & families have been told and are delighted.
What I Say: A monarchy would never do over here, of course, and we Americans are rightly proud of all that we have achieved and ensured through our republican traditions. Still, from a wider view of the life of nations, there is something about the continuity and renewal that each new generation of a monarchy, especially this one, provides that is satisfying at the level of the human heart, and for a moment makes one feel that all is right with the world and things are unfolding as they should.
Mere illusory sentiment and nonsense, you say. But Reader, pray tell me what feeling, great or small, have you ever had in your entire life that from the standpoint of cold science and remorseless logic was not, at bottom, a mere illusion? The right sort of illusions, or we may call them ideals, are both proper and indeed necessary to civilized life.
Man does not live by logic and science alone, not nearly. What lifts him above the level of mere animality is the enfolding sense of belonging to the human race, nobler than the beasts and a little lower than the angels, touched by something warm and tender and enduring - the human capacity for the divine which comes hopefully into the world all over again at the birth of each new child - that is to say, a freshly minted spark of the Love that moves the stars.
The editors of the Telegraph seem to agree with your Head Trucker:
A baby, to be welcomed into the world, does not have to show any qualifications. The nation welcomes this particular prince not just because his parents, the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge, have exhibited charm, humour and a sense of duty. Nor is an heir to the throne a good thing just because the present Queen is so admirable. It is the case, though, that Britain is readier now to declare itself in favour of the monarchy than a generation ago. This only reflects the arguments of republicans, which are threadbare and theoretical, whereas the benefits of the monarchy have been tried and tested by any Briton alive. Nor is it an objection that an heir comes by accident of birth. Accidents of birth are the way that families continue in being, and a family is a microcosm of the kingdom. . . .
The Prince arrives at an interesting time in the history of the United Kingdom. It is in a period of transition, though not, we are confident, a transition to a dismembered Union. Gone is the weary presumption that we are a small island in decline. We have always been quite a large island, as islands go. The sense of nationhood need not run out like North Sea oil. “No future” sang the Sex Pistols for the Silver Jubilee of 1977, but there was a future, of our own making – and there still is. The monarchy is part of it. The Archbishop of Canterbury, Justin Welby, exhibited a welcome historical perspective in commenting on the birth. When this child is old, he observed, “the 1940s will be as far away as the Crimean War and the charge of the Light Brigade is today”. Many of us will not be there to look back from that standpoint, but it shows vividly that (like any child) a prince is a declaration of confidence in the future. By embodying history, monarchy is implicitly conservative; by investing in generations to come it is implicitly progressive.
So we are left with emotions as warm as the weather. These are not irrational if founded on a fact, and a fact weighing 8lb 6oz is a solid enough fact. We wish mother and son well. When any baby is born we may want to ring bells in celebration. For a prince, we can, and the big guns too will fire 41 times in salute. This is something we are not shy to make a noise about.
Update, 7/24/13: The Telegraph reports that the little tyke is to be named George Alexander Louis, formally known as HRH Prince George of Cambridge. Which is a very nice name, to be sure, but I was a bit disappointed that Philip was not one of the names. I don't think the Duke of Edinburgh, still convalescing now at Windsor Castle after abdominal surgery last month, has ever gotten his props for being the rock of the monarchy in this queen's reign.
But George certainly is a good remembrance of the Queen's father and grandfather, both beloved and very successful monarchs.
4 comments:
I have a hard time getting excited over a baby born to privilege who will never ever want for anything it's whole fucking life.
Lots of people in Africa and Asia and other hellholes of the world feel just the same about you and me - to them we are the 1% who have all the good things of life while they are starving and suffering.
I suppose when we talk of privilege, whatever that may mean, the question is not whether we have it or not, but what we do with it, don't you think?
Peace, bro.
Those privileges come with heavy responsibilities and the loss of so much we lowly commoners hold dear.
Fine words, Russ. Well said.
Yes, a crown is a heavy burden that most of us would find unbearable.
Appreciate ya bud.
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